A raccoon stretches itself on the window sill of the Paige Donnelly Law Firm on the 23rd floor of the UBS Tower in St. Paul, Minn., Tuesday, June 12, 2018. The raccoon stranded on the ledge of the building in St. Paul captivated onlookers and generated interest on social media after it started scaling the office building. (Evan Frost/Minnesota Public Radio via AP)

Snacking on smelly, wet cat food, the raccoon that offered a nation a split-second of respite sat in a cage atop UBS Plaza, whose final, 23rd story it had scaled about 3 a.m.

UBS’s management contracted with Brooklyn Park-based Wildlife Management Services to trap the animal, who was in good health, according to the firm and city officials.

The raccoon that scaled the UBS Plaza was caught in a live trap baited with cat food overnight in St. Paul and was picked up by Wildlife Management Services Wednesday, June 13, 2018. (Evan Frost/Minnesota Public Radio via AP)

Christina Valdivia of Wildlife Management Services said the roughly 1-year-old female raccoon did not appear hungry or thirsty — it had glutted on pigeon eggs at some point Monday, when it kicked the whole saga off by getting stuck on a ledge.

“We’ve been getting calls and texts from all over the country and the world,” St. Paul mayor Melvin Carter said at an impromptu press conference Wednesday morning. “This proves St. Paul is the place to take a risk and reach new heights.”

The little raccoon’s story began Monday when several downtown Twitter users snapped photos of the animal stranded on a second-story ledge near the Seventh Street skyway and Cedar Street, where it had apparently found a pigeon nest.

Late Tuesday morning, maintenance employees of St. Paul’s Town Square building tried to tempt the raccoon down with an impromptu plywood pole, but the critter was having none of it.

A raccoon scurries up the side of the UBS Tower in St. Paul, Minn., on Tuesday, June 12, 2018. (Evan Frost/Minnesota Public Radio via AP)

Instead, the spooked animal began scaling the slightly-curved edifice of the building, not stopping until it reached UBS’s 22nd floor, where it began licking the window of a swanky office. It napped for several hours on the window ledge before moving up and on, this time scaling to the 23rd floor — the last remaining floor with windows, or ledges. Above it, rather than the slightly-curved spaces it had previously climbed, rose an expanse of flat stone.

In the meantime, officials with the city’s animal services department decided that a live trap on the roof, baited with food, would be best. Anything more might further spook the beast.

News crews assembled, and gazed up at the animal through the night, occasionally bathing it with spotlights. Around 11 p.m. it began to descend, ever so slowly, but by the 17th floor decided against that route.

Minnesota Pubic Radio staffers managed to snag naming rights for the animal — inundating the Internet with the Twitter hashtag #MPRRaccoon, which promptly caught on. MPR’s offices face the space where the animal was originally stranded, and at least one staffer began tweeting concern for the animal as early as Monday. On Tuesday, employees occasionally stepped outside to further document the animal’s ascent to greatness on Twitter.

By 6:30 p.m., the hashtag was Twitter’s No. 1 trending topic and was also popular on Instagram.

Finally, in the early-morning hours, the raccoon scampered to the roof, scaling the several-meter long flat surface before reaching the edge and disappearing. After several hours, and hundreds of bated-breath Twitter inquiries, UBS’s management tweeted a photo of the animal, and noted it was alive and well.

“The falcons were circling like crazy,” a security staffer at the tower said, noting two active falcon nests on nearby highrises.

A raccoon stretches out on a windowsill high above downtown St. Paul, Minn., Tuesday, June 12, 2018. The raccoon stranded on the ledge of a building in St. Paul captivated onlookers and generated interest on social media after it started scaling an office building. (Evan Frost/Minnesota Public Radio via AP)

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